We all know the USDA Food Pyramid is flawed conventional “wisdom” but what about the Vegan Food Pyramid? Can there be anything worse for your health than being a vegan?
Answer: Yes, being a low-fat vegan!
All joking aside, for today’s post I would like to share a true story from one of my clients. We are still shaking our heads in disbelief that this conversation with a “physician” actually took place. Let’s meet Jane and get a little background on her….
My name is Jane and I met Paula in Sept. 2008 for an initial fitness assessment. I was 50 years old, had some health issues and was unhappy with my current fitness/nutritional regime. Here’s how the health problems began…
In 2004 with no health problems but at the urging of my then trainer, I went to a vegan diet. She showed me a movie on The Rave Diet which extolled the benefits of a plant-based diet and came with a video showing helpless chickens getting their beaks cut off and crippled from being cramped in cages. It also showed sick cattle feeding off of manure and other animal byproducts along with steroid infested turkeys toppling over because their breasts were so big they couldn’t walk. Being an animal lover I took all this animal abuse to heart.
I immediately pulled a 360 and took all animal products out of my diet including eggs and dairy. I was about 125 pounds of healthy muscle and 17% body fat. I felt great and had no health issues. I was very defined and enjoyed a healthy exercise routine of weight lifting and cardiovascular exercise. After switching to the vegan lifestyle I immediately lost about 5 to 7 pounds and looked absolutely shredded.
Wow, I thought, this is great! But then, the weight kept coming off and my beautiful muscle started disappearing. I looked soft and skinny fat. I started freaking out a little but stayed on the path because of how “healthy” it was. After about 3 months I just couldn’t stand it anymore and I added fish only back in but still no eggs/dairy or shellfish. I felt a little better although the food was not enjoyable anymore and I used to love to eat. I was hungry after every meal no matter how much rice, beans, bread, and vegetables I included with the bland white fish or better yet hydrolyzed soy products.
I added very little oil/fat to anything. Just a little olive oil on my salads and vegetables; tofu was delicious, right–even though my husband refused to eat it? After all, those animal fats would clog my arteries and kill me.
After about 6 to 9 months I noticed I didn’t have quite the energy I used to when working out, I was very irritable and easily angered, I didn’t sleep well at night, was cold all the time and I had intermittent bouts of depression. Being 50 years old I blamed it on hormones and going through the change.
Fast forward to 2008 and my health had drastically deteriorated over those 4 years. On a side note, isn’t it interesting how pro-plant based diet propaganda films like What The Health never seem to cover these types of cases!
My last physical and blood work showed thyroid dysfunction but not enough to warrant treatment, low iron levels, positive response for autoimmune issues, borderline high blood sugar but a very “healthy” cholesterol level of 155. I sought the help of a holistic/conventional MD and immediately took to him. He made a few suggestions on supplements I could take but did not even ask me about my diet.
Around the same time, I met Paula and switched to her for training. In desperation, I listened to her complete opposite advice on what to eat. Always an all or nothing girl I did a 360 again and switched to a Primal and traditional foods diet. I threw out my grains, my soy, beans and bought myself a piece of buffalo meat, cooked it in butter and ate it. OMG, I had never tasted anything so good. I slept like a log that night, I felt satisfied and “happy” for the first time in years. For a solid week I had buffalo meat at least 2x a day and lots of butter on everything, I literally craved it. The extreme cravings eventually subsided. My muscles started coming back. I followed this diet very strictly for at least 1 ½ years before putting anything “un-Primal” back in on occasion. Yearly blood work kept improving. After 2 years the autoimmune issues were resolved. I felt great–slept soundly, had endless energy, zero depression/anger and was the happiest I had ever been in my life. So I was very surprised when I went in last week to get the results of my yearly blood work…
While waiting to see the doctor the nurse had given me a copy. As I looked over it I said to myself this is the best it has ever been and I was very excited–I couldn’t wait to hear what he had to say about it.
He reviewed almost each and every marker with me in detail. ANA screen negative, iron levels ideal, Hemo A1C within range, fasting blood glucose 77, CRP .2, vitamin D levels were way up, thyroid in ideal ranges, not one marker was out of “normal” range except for my cholesterol. Total 239: HDL 118, LDL 112, TRI’s 47. I thought it looked pretty darn good.
The conversation with the doctor went like this (any of this sound familiar?) . . .
“Well, we need to do something to get your cholesterol down”.
What’s wrong with my cholesterol?
“It’s too high”.
But that’s because of the high HDL, the total ratio is well below the range limit.
“Yes, but HDL that high is not good, it could be indicative of neurotoxicity, we want to lower it”
But my tri’s are low–wouldn’t that be indicative of low inflammation.
“Yes, but they are a little too low.”
Huh? I thought.
“And your LDL is too high.”
But they could be big fluffy particles.
“Yes, we did not test for that; we might do that in the future”.
And my CRP is below .2, isn’t that indicative of low risk, low inflammation?
“Yes, but your cholesterol is too high. What I would recommend to prevent heart disease–which is a 360 from what you have been doing–but you really should give it a try, is a low-fat vegan diet with less than 10% of your calories from fat. Numerous studies from Dean Ornish show. . . blah, blah, blah.”
But Doc that is what made me sick in the first place! And Dean Ornish sells himself for grant money plus he’s chubby.
“Well, if you aren’t willing to do that take some fish oil capsules that we sell here.”
But I eat egg yolks every day, liver once a week and make stock from fish heads and carcasses.
“Yes, well we also have a protein powder that will lower your cholesterol.”
Hmmm, powdered peas, no thanks. And thank you for your advice doc but I believe it’s time to go home and start dinner. . . grass fed ribeye cooked in raw butter with a nice big helping of veggies cooked in lard freshly rendered from my happy pastured pigs!
Thank you, Jane, you have learned your lessons well. But a low-fat vegan diet?? Nah, long live saturated fat and our healthy hearts!
FREEDOM (@StateUsesGuns)
confessions of a reformed vegetarian, http://t.co/VvXP5p3M
Joel Sims (@joelmichaelsims) (@joelmichaelsims)
Once-vegan turned Primal/traditional, daily buffalo eater – http://t.co/YohgaP0U
Angie
I went wholly vegetarian for almost 3 years. I ate soy everything (milk/cheese/margarine/meat subs/mayo/nuts/flour/etc.) and within a few months I found myself crying a lot, for no reason. I gained several pounds of puffiness, for lack of a better term. I was an emotional mess! My doctor put me on ZOLOFT because I was ‘depressed’. After a few months of that nightmare, with side effects that my doctor said she had never heard of (but I later found to be common when I got Internet!) I stopped the Zoloft, and I also started to find more things about what soy can do to your hormones. I started to eat meat again and cut out the soy, and then I was fine! When I cut out all the other stuff (I also had followed low-fat for years) and went on a higher protein/high fat diet, my fingernails were hard as rocks for the first time since I was a teenager. My skin was finally supple again and not dry. My hair again feels thick and healthy. This is how we were made to eat, not graze like animals. Nature knows best!
Ute Mitchell via Facebook
Fantastic post.
Chris
Wonderful post. Very motivating to keep on my Primal/Paleo diet. I have slipped back into old patterns over the past 3 weeks and am trying to stay on my path. I will keep this and refer often to keep my head in the game.
Amy Rhodes McClellan via Facebook
MOST EXCELLENT article!!!!! I will share with all of my crossfit friends:) Thanks you.
Rebecca
This was my experience 100%! My mom and I both went vegan a couple years ago, gained a ton of weight, felt sluggish, thin hair……fast forward to now with raw butter, eggs, etc. and I feel great. Thanks for your excellent site, I love reading it.
thehealthyhomeeconomist via Facebook
Paula rocks the fitness posts, doesn’t she? If you want to get more of her work, be sure to check out Muscle magazine .. she writes a regular piece for them.
Sarah
Ah, the food pyramid. My children and I were looking at that a few weeks ago. I said that it was waaaaayyyy wrong! So my 10 year old pulled out her coloured pencils and started making her own. I was unsure of where some of the foods should fall into but we did the best we could. Then I found the food pyramid on Nourishing our Children. I was thrilled to see that I was not too far off on it! That was exciting. We are not 100% on the traditional diet but I can see that we continue to make strides towards it. When I think back to a year ago we have have made great improvements. My son, 8 and who is strongly motivated by his taste buds and stomach, has even come back after eating some sugar and can tell he does not feel as well as he does when we eat what has become normal for us.
Sarah
Sarah, I have seen great improvement with taking FCLO/HVBO capsules. I am nursing and taking 4 of them a day. A few of the problems are starting to crop back up. Should I increase what I am taking? Would chicken liver pate be an acceptable addition even if the chicken is from a standard corn/soy diet?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Yes, liver pate is a wonderful nutrient dense food. Make it with the best quality chicken livers you can source and fit within the budget.
HealthyHomeEconomist (@HealthyHomeEcon) (@HealthyHomeEcon) (@HealthyHomeEcon) (@HealthyHomeEcon) (@HealthyHomeEcon)
Confessions of a Reformed Vegetarian http://t.co/tIU5O7Fv